Search Special Collections
Results
Total number of records: 6
Count of Subject
Top 10: People and organisations
Virgidemiarum : sixe bookes. First three bookes, of tooth-lesse satyrs. 1. Poeticall. 2. Academicall. 3. Morall
Hall, Joseph (1574-1656)
1602
Third edition. P.26 mis-numbered 20. In verse. The numbered items are bracketed together on the title page. Signatures: A-E⁸. Anonymous. By Joseph Hall.
The temple of fame, a poem : Inscrib'd to Mr. Congreve
Bryan (fl. 1703); Congreve, William (1670-1729); Yalden, Thomas (1670-1736); Hills, Henry (1713)
1709
A piracy? The poem was first published in 1703. Signatures: A⁸. Also issued in 'A collection of the best English poetry, by several hands'.--cf. Foxon. Mainly celebrates the victory of Admiral...
Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis Angliæ, Scotiæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ, duodecimo. At the Parliament begun at VVestminster, the five and twentieth day of April, an. Dom. 1660... [etc.]
Great Britain
1660
Signatures: A-E². Last word of first line of text: 'Par-'; first word of line below initial: 'shall'; last word of last full line of text of first page: 'and'. Statutes 12 Car.II., c. 4-6. At end...
The character of a rebellion : and what England may expect from one : Or, The designs of dissenters examined by reason, experience, and the laws and statutes of the realm
Nalson, John (1638?-1686)
1681
Signatures: A-E². Attributed to John Nalson by Wing.
A collection of sundry petitions presented to the Kings most excellent Majesty : as also, to the two most honourable Houses, now assembled in Parliament. And others already signed, by most of the gentry, ministers and free-holders of several counties, in behalf of episcopacy, lyturgy, rights of the Crown, and liberty of the subject. In opposition to Popery, Presbytery, anarchy and confusion. Occasioned by the many libellous petitions, then secretly set on foot both against church and state
Aston, Sir Thomas (1600-1645); Great Britain. Sovereign (1625-1649 : Charles I); Great Britain. Parliament
1681
Signatures: [A]-E². Compiled by Sir Thomas Aston. Cf. Halkett & Laing. v. 1, p. 373.
The Character of an ill-court-favourite : representing the mischiefs that flow from ministers of state when they are more great than good; the arts they use to seduce their masters, and the unhappiness of princes that are curs'd with such destructive servants
1681
Signatures: [A]-E². "Mr. Greenough considered this barely a character, if at all." Anon. Indexed in: Greenough, C.N. Theophrastan character p. 118.